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Chicago examiner vol vi no 45 a m wednesday february 12 1908 12 pages price one cent ijÂ«'*Â«4 by camw 30 o.nts pÂ«r month shaw launches his presidential boom with a plea for trusts declare laws should be kept but restoration of business should come first scores bryan's policy says where roosevelt chas i tises with whip nebraska will chastise with scorpion * - â€¢* w a.rshall mich feb 11 /Â» \ i'x-sccrctary of the treasury leslie m shaw who recently icd from the presidency of the ' irncgic trust company of nev york launched his campaign for the presidency here this evening in a spcecli before the republican club his address was an argument against any president sticking to his prede cessor's policies he said when theodore roosevelt look ' thc oath of office he announced thai he would adhere to and follow out the , policies of his predecessor within ' forty-eight hours to his lasting credit | i lie new president was inaugurating policies of his own xo president has met the task that has come naturally to his hands with greater courage or more signal success than lias theodore roosevelt draws lessons from panic there arc two classes of people i one that approves every act and every trend of the present administration and insi.is that thc same shall be continued indefinitely and forever and another it possible still more un vvise that condemns everything and who insists that we should undo at the earliest possible moment whatever has been accomplished over 300.00 freight cars standing inpty on the tracks 8.000 locomotives and out of commission one â– fourth of tlie population of several large cities idle and for the first time under republican administration free souphouses in every industrial center and the price of farm produce naturally and materially l"t"*e-iated furnish an object lesson which ought to produce a measure of sober rnliidedness on the part of the american j pi * wants business activity restored 3d while i approve of the strict en â– ii^nt of the laws and the enactment â€ž, oustraining and preventive legislation i can hut believe the time has come to gitc primary consideration to thc restora â– ii of industrial apd business activity the admitted leader of the opposition party confident of his nomination at deo ver is just now seeking popular favor by ftiuiododâ€”g the unwise policy of a foolish etebrew tin my predecessor chastised you with whins if elected i will chastise iih scorpiou he fails to realize that excessive 100 frcqueut punishment is as subversive r discipline as laxity demands remedy for panics near the close of a most active ana prosperous business year witb a crop worth more than 10,000 000 000 just har vested suddenly and without warning the nnnks in every large city suspended money payment not because they had been mis managed or were iu bad condition but be came of a defective currency system such a catastrophe would be impossible and.un thinkable in any other commercial country in the world certainly its repetition should be made impossible here as soou as industrial activity is re stored whether it be in the uear future or t the end of a quadreunium our trans portation facilities will be agaiu inade quate within a decade our railway ton nage has increased llti per cent while thc capitalization of all freight carrying roads lias increased only 33 per ceut this 35 per cent include of course nil the water i hat has been injected into the grand ag iiiegale of railroad capitalization in ten years there is no water however in thc 116 per cent increase in tonnage there will be very soon as much need of dupli cating the tracks of all our transcontinental nd interstate railways as originally there was for single tracks declares confidence is necessary money is now abundant and obtainable for commercial purposes at low rates of in terest but industrial and transportation enterprises ate unable to borrow at auy price the restoratiou of confidence both ai home and abroad in the stability and . security of property rights is a primary essential id the equipment soon lo become ins pen tive lu making new laws lei us adhere to the anglo-saxon policy of strengthening hie weak places perfecting that which is found lo be good elimuialing ilia which i found harmful and iu all ihings that are i in hie to disturb or disrupt move with caution somewhere * bet ween the extremes of unrestrained business and con m__rel_l lleenss and â€¢- system of tc*i school deficit is 801,941 thrice that of last administration board passes budget carrying total of 12,1 90,659 with salary increases unfair says miss haley calls raise a farce as old teachers get only 25 for 100 cut off the annual budget of the board of edu cation was presented at a meeting of the trustees held last nlgbt the budget which was passed in omnibus provides for the distribution in the various depart ments of the school system of 12,190 0.0.40 of this 3,677,520.7 is apportioned to the building department and 8,513,129.60 to the expenses of the educational depart ment the deficit faced by the present board in its annual accounting is 501,941.20 the declared deficit equals 104,413.07 this amount is itemized as bills unpaid " in addition to this a loan of 600,000 made last fall for educational expenses adds to the deficit together with 435,000 classi fied as a building department temporary loan deficit is tripled cash on hand in the educational and building funds totals 337,461.87 th's nvuouut from the total liabilities leaves the deficit nearly three times that incurred by the trustees of the previous administration together with the budget came the plan of the present board's finance committee messrs spiegel robinson gartz and dawes to raise the salaries of superintendents and primary school teachers for these salaries 5,145,129.69 was ap propriated the advance will go into im mediate effect the table presented by the finance committee last night was as follows : primary teachers second group farce says miss haley the raise in teachers salaries made by the board is au immense farce declared miss margaret haley president of the teachers federation and an interested spectator of the board's proceedings the cut in salaries perpetrated by the present hoard last year caused a loss of 100 a year to 2.000 teachers by far the greater number of these teachers were in the seventh and subse quent years of service the board gen erously returns them 25 per year of this amount the remaining 75 is distributed among other teachers an interesting feature of last nighfs meeting developed when trustee gartz arose to reply to charges made by the city smoke inspector to the effect that the board of education was making little if any effort to abate the smoke nnisance if the smoke inspector is correctly quoted in attacking this body asserted trustee jart he is making an unfair unjustified and absolutely uncalled for charge to a motion at the last meeting calling for the appointment of w t monroe as cenrus taker for the schools at a salary of f2sq a month trustee post last night took exception and his motion to reconsider was tabled trustees mills and spiegel clashed when the former protested against the presenta tion of the budget without preliminary no tice to board members of the nature of the voluminous document we hold no star chamber meetings when the finance committee meets de clared trustee spiegel members of the board may attend if they had no suffi cient notice of the meeting iu this instance it ls not my fault parent accuses principal considerable interest attached to a com muuication received from charles k moore s winthrop avenue â– protesting against the manner in which the graeme stewart school is conducted under prin cipal a o coddington mr moore protested against the treat ment accorded his twelve-year-old son who be declares is a victim of a plot pnhii ipated in by the principal and the missr-s itvan and hammond teachers io railroad charles van moore from thc sci.opl a visit to the scho'or by mrs moore he declares revealed a lack of discipline which ihe instructors do little to better rotb tea-heri he says have laid bands on the boy and the principal favored ttu alleged treatment mr moore asks for a icttring beiore the board the school budget total appropriation for school hoard pur poses 512.190.650.40 for educational expend itures 8,513,139.64 por building purposes 3,677,529.71 for salaries of super intendents and teach ers of elementary schools including proposed increase 5,145,139.69 deficit faced hy present hoard 801,941.30 why the jury found mrs dora m'donald not guilty m'namara was the only physician that made a thorough physical examination of the defendant *â€¢â– â€¢* subsequent to guerin's death we especially paid a great deal of attention to that portion of his testimony that told of ihe marks found on mrs mcdonald's neck indicating that she had been choked this and the finding of hairpins on the floor showed that there had been a struggle and the court had in structed us that if we found there had been a struggle we could be justified in finding a verdict of ac quittai."â€”statement by juror charles m'grath mrs m'donald and her nurse enjoying a quiet tea after the verdict girl holds alamo agist all texas hero's granddaughter focd â€¢ less defies governor sher iff and daughters sax antonio tex feb 11 without food and water for more than thirty hours miss adlna dezavala president of the dezavala chapter daughters of the re public ot texas is still in possession ot the alamo she defies the injunction is sued by judge norman k kittrell of hous ton ordering her to leave and dares the officers of the law to put her out of the historic building she says she will te malu iu the building until she starves before she will surrender it the row is the result of a spiil in the ranks of the daughters of the republic over which faction shall control the alamo the state originally turned the alamo over to miss dezavala to-night governor campbell ordered w c day state super intendent of public buildings to take back the alamo at a recent meeting of the daughters of the republic a resolution was adopted turn ing the building over to the executive com mittee of the daughters of the republic miss dezavala refused to turn it over the transfer of the property was to have been made last night miss dezavala took possession yesterday afternoon she locked the doors in the face of the sheriff who tried to serve the injunction he broke down the doors but miss dezavala took refuge on the second floor in the room in which bowie was killed and she has remained there since the sheriff hns refused to permit food to be carried to her miss dezavala's grandfather was vice president dezavala of the texas repub lic one of the men who fought valiantly to defend the alamo against the mexi can london to run special street cars for women will try experiment to save them in rush hours london feb 11 the county council proposes the experiment of running a cer tain number of tram cars for women only during the rush hours in the morning the fierce struggle arlong the passengers at the suburban termini has long been a scandal women and girls have to wrestle with men and boys to secure places in the ears on their way to work they often sustain injuries and have their clothing torn 3 killed 18 injured in western train wreck many plunged through broken trestle work portland ore feb 11 a train fe.'l through a trestle near bete to-night three people were killed in the wreck and eign teen injured many of the injured are in serious condition and it is exacted that tlie number of deaths will be swelled the train was running at a i;.li rate of pej.mi when ii plunged through the bridge episcopal church may soon unite with rome says archbishop ryan prelate sees tendency in america to follow anglican movement for corporate union philadelphia pa feb ar ljis_op ryan thinks there may be a cor porate union of anglicans and episcopal ians with the roman catholic church in the near future the archbishop said to day it is a continuation of a movement that lias been going on for some time in eng land aiming ut reunion with rome the movement existed here before the adoption of the open pulpit canon but the pas sage ot that canon seems to be hasten ing it the present movement among episco palians in this country is the oue lord halifax and a great party iu engltiud belong to looking toward reunion with rome there can be no question that there is such a movement in the episcopal inn church i think a great many epis copalians will come into the catholic church individually and there may be a corporate union asked as to the terms on which the anglicans or episcopalians might enter the catholic church in a body the arch bishop said tbey would be arranged bv agreement with the pope prison for mme goold monaco feb 11.â€”the sentence of death lately passed on mme vere st leger goold for the mnrder of emma levin has been commuted to penal s-rvitude for life plan ravenswood bank prosecution 300 depositors to sue for losses arid talk of cells for operators protesting against the management of the affairs of the itavenswood exchange bank now in the hands of a receiver 300 indignant depositors met last evening in bennett hall and planned legal action to compel the individual promoters of the wrecked institution to make good their losses criminal action against rhc men respons ible for the failure of the bank was dis cussed and an investigation along these lines was promised by assistant state's attorney charles l mckinley himself a loser these men operating this bank under the state laws as a corporation would be guilty of the same offense for which john b walsh was convicted mr mckinley said the law provides no stockholders or officials of a bauk are allowed to bor row more than 10 per ceut of the total cash capital of a bank here we find officers borrowing mo per ceut and whether or not our hands are tied i am unable to say at this time however i will investigate the condition of a flairs myself under the law ami ir there is any way in which we can send them to the penitentiary you may be as sured 1 will do my duly denounce abbot and scoville tries of that where they belong yes go after abbot and scoville thev are the men who broke the bank antl phrases in stronger language greeted the state's attorney's remarks one depositor sergeant ki'ed de i.'eile followed mr mckjnley the men win ran llie ravenswood bank belong iu the penitentiary said he two days before they rto_t : tic oors scoville took 16 nf tt:y money and at the same time told ine their vaults were overflowing he said they did not know what to do with all the money tbey had iu the bank is this the conduct of an honest man the bank officials have fooled us long enough we want our money or we want tno.e fellows behind the bars where they belong go after them now we got noth ing from them so we lose anyway and make an example of ihem if we arc tu lose our bard-earned money approve plans to sue unanimous approval of a plan lo com mo!|ce suits against the individual opera tors of the bank was given following thc rcadiug of the report of a committee ap pointed by the depositors lo investigate the real cotidition of the bank our suits bave already been started by hilda samuelson ella blik a k harper and the hamilton national bank who were depositors al the time the petition was filed last november asking that a te eetver be appointed the uavenswood hank was i partner ship and we found on investigation thai including the present partners there were i wenty nine different persoi.i who bad at eats up his show pig hen duck,goose hungry husband devours trained animals while wife is away getting contracts / new york feb 11 the hallerhan theatrical company of england has gone to smash in new york because the hungry husband of tie lady proprietor ate up all the actors after having delighted the crowned heads or europe the hallerban theatrical com pany came over here seven weeks ago for an extended american tour the haller han theatrical company consisted of mrs grace hallerhan sole owner and manager percival hallerhan husband and property man the beautiful performing pig flo flo two trained hens two educated roosters a trick duck and an acrobatic goose the company put up in the basement of a theatrical boarding house on west twenty-eighth street between ninth and tenth avenues ah the performers slept together and ate together when there was anything to eat mrs hallerhan groan vg under the weight of international press notices went out to get a contract for the act she was gone three weeks bui sadly enough none of the broad way managers would make a contract with i he hallerhan theatrical company mrs hallerhan explained the wonderful stunts of her actors in tain the goose couid t loop the loop with a lighted pipe in its talons the hens skipped ropes the roosters did a prize fight with the goves flo flo imitated :> policeman perfectly the act was truly marvelous but none of the managers could use it well said mrs hallerhan i shall go wi'sr to seek engagements and she did taking all the company's money with her iiiim loiivin percival behind in the base ment to care for the performers while she was gone j'ercival got hungrier and hungrier he hadn't a ceut he saw his actors starving about him flo flo the star of all the company was rapidly dwindling to the mere shadow of a piece of pork when one day two weeks ago the gnawing at perciral'a stomach overcame his 1'ive for his art and he strangled flo flo and ate her at a sitting three days later the trick hen gave up bei profession forever the goose and the roosters fol lowed as the days sped by i'erclval re served i'ne duck for the lasr 1 always had an affection for that thes pian he lamented as he finally wrung he nock ifs a shame but it uausi yiiis morning mrs halicrnan got sac bad been successful she bad n seven contracts in the wosi she burst ini the headquarters with a face of iovous smile the halierhan theatrical company is oil it 5 feet azslzv sue crieu mvrciv.il i s i he actors i'orcival ruiibed a cpmpla'c-ejn mad in there he answered i , id to ao ir grade it was me or ike bow gr.ieie - . so 1 et the show n hi out west i i he west side ponce courl j-night mr uiilli'iban recovered rrom ml i ohicli the fate of , iir perf.ru thrown her nnd tried to get ru order to her uuebaua s arrest k ' j â€¢ j not guilty verdict in m'donald trial by walter linn woman accused of murder whistles nonchalantly while awaiting jury's decision comforts weeping nurse i expected it all along she said i felt sure god was with me shakes jurors hands courtroom bubbles with laughter when tension of nerves relaxes : , a\x rs dora m'donald was ne /â–¼\ quitted a little before 6:30 â– " o'clock last evening of the charge of murdering w_bstev ?. guerin the young man whom she had loved for years it had been a long strainâ€”twenty-two days of trial capped by five hours of wrangling in the jury room those five hours of mystery had the lawyers and relatives of mrs mc donald on edge but she sat whistling in the custodian's room unlif she was led in 1.0 hear from a foreman's lips what the future held for her surely that air of awful unconcern would disappear now even if she bad listened unmoved to the abuse of prosecutors and the degrading stories told by witnesses for the state she must feel the strain of this moment all but defendant show great strain every other soul in the courtroom did there is no moment of suspense like it and men who spend their lives in criminal courts cannot get over the feeling of chill dread in th moments that elapse before a verdict can be officially recorded things happen so fast that a sten ographer can scarcely take tiiem down and yet they seem to drag out into eternity judge brentano himself was pale the feldmans brothers of mrs mc donald looked as though they hat just heard their death warrant read to them the nieces o mrs mcdonald mrs ethel martyn and miss blanch vaughn were haggard and so was the defendant's sister mrs richard vaughn j hamilton lewis chief counsel for the defense could not endure to be present at all and his associates pat rick h o'donnell benjamin m shaff ner mr cain and mr norden could not sit still in their chairs first came judge brentano accom panied by judge chetlain the pre siding judge had been summoned by telephone at 6 o'clock the little crowd of reporters and persistent spectators who had hung about all afternoon threw away cigars and cigarettes and fell into attitudes of expectancy and anxiety they pressed forward to get seats near the jury box and leaned forward in their chairs many of them stood up until they were ordered by bailiff bradley to sit bring in the jury said judge bren tano as he dropped into the big leather-up bolstered cbair behind the bench bradley was waiting for the word at the door to the judge's right looking very solemn and syhynx-like the twelve men filed in and took their usual places mrs m'donald appears in absolute calmness at the same time mrs mcdonald came through the corridor from the custodian's room accompanied by ber nurse miss a k beck mitts beck was trembling hilt there was not a tremor in mrs mcdonald _ bands or a movement of the facial muscles to indicate that she felt the least exelts uient mr norden pulled out her armchair for ml pushed k under her again as s it down ever man in tht uni felt n hoke it hi throat n tr if mrs m onila d it tt s te ave o 1 evidence of it gentl men s'd rhe judge turn ,-Â» totr/hrd ih jury bsve vou agreed upon . verdi'i 3 at first there wa iÂ«wc utf us continued on 2d page 6th column continued on sth page 2d column year of service salary recom tended first . 550 650 he-ond 600 675 third 625 700 fourth _ 700 750 fifth 750 soo sixth s2 50 seventh and subsequent 850 75 first grocp kitst 900 825 second 950 975 third and subsequent 1,000 i.i grammar teachers second grodp present salary year of service salary recommended first $ 550 , rf 650 s-cond 600 675 third 875 725 fourth 725 77 filth 775 825 sixth 850 875 seventh and subsequent 875 900 first grodp first 925 50 second 975 1,000 third and subsequent 1,000 1.025 iguth grade teachers second group first and subsequent 900 925 first grocp first 950 975 second 1 000 1 025 third and subsequent 1,023 1,050 â„¢Â«-= a i weather forecast i 1 Chicago and vicinity show y ers wednesday and probably thurs \, j day continued mild temperature vtt fresh easterly shifting to southed j^f winds the help wanted column of the examiner daily contain many good posi tions fcr the unemployed * a position for everybody is impossible at any time but a large percentage of the best workers who call are furnished a good posi tion through the services ofthe examiner employment exchange wm-57 7 â€” window trimmer high grade man must have general mer chandise experience state street preferred good opening for the right man salary 1 to 22 mji-191 â€” ledger clerk must be thoroughly experienced and not over 30 years of age and able to show a clear record 75 to 90 f-1121 â€” stenographer young ladv flrst class experienced capable of getting out large number of short fetters with as much speed possi ble consistent with good form 12 to 15 f-l 14 bookkeeper to take charge ot small office references as to character und ability must be al ; stenographic experience desired salary 15 call in person 70 washington st trmm m i i %^^>Â»^ w m^,^^rf*-'''''''''**i-g b g'-'i^''^^^^f 6 opportunity k watch for ihe keal estate adver li tisements in the classified section of fe the sunday examiner the best prop t erty to be had tn Chicago will be found jam in the examiner want ad pages nl

Chicago examiner vol vi no 45 a m wednesday february 12 1908 12 pages price one cent ijÂ«'*Â«4 by camw 30 o.nts pÂ«r month shaw launches his presidential boom with a plea for trusts declare laws should be kept but restoration of business should come first scores bryan's policy says where roosevelt chas i tises with whip nebraska will chastise with scorpion * - â€¢* w a.rshall mich feb 11 /Â» \ i'x-sccrctary of the treasury leslie m shaw who recently icd from the presidency of the ' irncgic trust company of nev york launched his campaign for the presidency here this evening in a spcecli before the republican club his address was an argument against any president sticking to his prede cessor's policies he said when theodore roosevelt look ' thc oath of office he announced thai he would adhere to and follow out the , policies of his predecessor within ' forty-eight hours to his lasting credit | i lie new president was inaugurating policies of his own xo president has met the task that has come naturally to his hands with greater courage or more signal success than lias theodore roosevelt draws lessons from panic there arc two classes of people i one that approves every act and every trend of the present administration and insi.is that thc same shall be continued indefinitely and forever and another it possible still more un vvise that condemns everything and who insists that we should undo at the earliest possible moment whatever has been accomplished over 300.00 freight cars standing inpty on the tracks 8.000 locomotives and out of commission one â– fourth of tlie population of several large cities idle and for the first time under republican administration free souphouses in every industrial center and the price of farm produce naturally and materially l"t"*e-iated furnish an object lesson which ought to produce a measure of sober rnliidedness on the part of the american j pi * wants business activity restored 3d while i approve of the strict en â– ii^nt of the laws and the enactment â€ž, oustraining and preventive legislation i can hut believe the time has come to gitc primary consideration to thc restora â– ii of industrial apd business activity the admitted leader of the opposition party confident of his nomination at deo ver is just now seeking popular favor by ftiuiododâ€”g the unwise policy of a foolish etebrew tin my predecessor chastised you with whins if elected i will chastise iih scorpiou he fails to realize that excessive 100 frcqueut punishment is as subversive r discipline as laxity demands remedy for panics near the close of a most active ana prosperous business year witb a crop worth more than 10,000 000 000 just har vested suddenly and without warning the nnnks in every large city suspended money payment not because they had been mis managed or were iu bad condition but be came of a defective currency system such a catastrophe would be impossible and.un thinkable in any other commercial country in the world certainly its repetition should be made impossible here as soou as industrial activity is re stored whether it be in the uear future or t the end of a quadreunium our trans portation facilities will be agaiu inade quate within a decade our railway ton nage has increased llti per cent while thc capitalization of all freight carrying roads lias increased only 33 per ceut this 35 per cent include of course nil the water i hat has been injected into the grand ag iiiegale of railroad capitalization in ten years there is no water however in thc 116 per cent increase in tonnage there will be very soon as much need of dupli cating the tracks of all our transcontinental nd interstate railways as originally there was for single tracks declares confidence is necessary money is now abundant and obtainable for commercial purposes at low rates of in terest but industrial and transportation enterprises ate unable to borrow at auy price the restoratiou of confidence both ai home and abroad in the stability and . security of property rights is a primary essential id the equipment soon lo become ins pen tive lu making new laws lei us adhere to the anglo-saxon policy of strengthening hie weak places perfecting that which is found lo be good elimuialing ilia which i found harmful and iu all ihings that are i in hie to disturb or disrupt move with caution somewhere * bet ween the extremes of unrestrained business and con m__rel_l lleenss and â€¢- system of tc*i school deficit is 801,941 thrice that of last administration board passes budget carrying total of 12,1 90,659 with salary increases unfair says miss haley calls raise a farce as old teachers get only 25 for 100 cut off the annual budget of the board of edu cation was presented at a meeting of the trustees held last nlgbt the budget which was passed in omnibus provides for the distribution in the various depart ments of the school system of 12,190 0.0.40 of this 3,677,520.7 is apportioned to the building department and 8,513,129.60 to the expenses of the educational depart ment the deficit faced by the present board in its annual accounting is 501,941.20 the declared deficit equals 104,413.07 this amount is itemized as bills unpaid " in addition to this a loan of 600,000 made last fall for educational expenses adds to the deficit together with 435,000 classi fied as a building department temporary loan deficit is tripled cash on hand in the educational and building funds totals 337,461.87 th's nvuouut from the total liabilities leaves the deficit nearly three times that incurred by the trustees of the previous administration together with the budget came the plan of the present board's finance committee messrs spiegel robinson gartz and dawes to raise the salaries of superintendents and primary school teachers for these salaries 5,145,129.69 was ap propriated the advance will go into im mediate effect the table presented by the finance committee last night was as follows : primary teachers second group farce says miss haley the raise in teachers salaries made by the board is au immense farce declared miss margaret haley president of the teachers federation and an interested spectator of the board's proceedings the cut in salaries perpetrated by the present hoard last year caused a loss of 100 a year to 2.000 teachers by far the greater number of these teachers were in the seventh and subse quent years of service the board gen erously returns them 25 per year of this amount the remaining 75 is distributed among other teachers an interesting feature of last nighfs meeting developed when trustee gartz arose to reply to charges made by the city smoke inspector to the effect that the board of education was making little if any effort to abate the smoke nnisance if the smoke inspector is correctly quoted in attacking this body asserted trustee jart he is making an unfair unjustified and absolutely uncalled for charge to a motion at the last meeting calling for the appointment of w t monroe as cenrus taker for the schools at a salary of f2sq a month trustee post last night took exception and his motion to reconsider was tabled trustees mills and spiegel clashed when the former protested against the presenta tion of the budget without preliminary no tice to board members of the nature of the voluminous document we hold no star chamber meetings when the finance committee meets de clared trustee spiegel members of the board may attend if they had no suffi cient notice of the meeting iu this instance it ls not my fault parent accuses principal considerable interest attached to a com muuication received from charles k moore s winthrop avenue â– protesting against the manner in which the graeme stewart school is conducted under prin cipal a o coddington mr moore protested against the treat ment accorded his twelve-year-old son who be declares is a victim of a plot pnhii ipated in by the principal and the missr-s itvan and hammond teachers io railroad charles van moore from thc sci.opl a visit to the scho'or by mrs moore he declares revealed a lack of discipline which ihe instructors do little to better rotb tea-heri he says have laid bands on the boy and the principal favored ttu alleged treatment mr moore asks for a icttring beiore the board the school budget total appropriation for school hoard pur poses 512.190.650.40 for educational expend itures 8,513,139.64 por building purposes 3,677,529.71 for salaries of super intendents and teach ers of elementary schools including proposed increase 5,145,139.69 deficit faced hy present hoard 801,941.30 why the jury found mrs dora m'donald not guilty m'namara was the only physician that made a thorough physical examination of the defendant *â€¢â– â€¢* subsequent to guerin's death we especially paid a great deal of attention to that portion of his testimony that told of ihe marks found on mrs mcdonald's neck indicating that she had been choked this and the finding of hairpins on the floor showed that there had been a struggle and the court had in structed us that if we found there had been a struggle we could be justified in finding a verdict of ac quittai."â€”statement by juror charles m'grath mrs m'donald and her nurse enjoying a quiet tea after the verdict girl holds alamo agist all texas hero's granddaughter focd â€¢ less defies governor sher iff and daughters sax antonio tex feb 11 without food and water for more than thirty hours miss adlna dezavala president of the dezavala chapter daughters of the re public ot texas is still in possession ot the alamo she defies the injunction is sued by judge norman k kittrell of hous ton ordering her to leave and dares the officers of the law to put her out of the historic building she says she will te malu iu the building until she starves before she will surrender it the row is the result of a spiil in the ranks of the daughters of the republic over which faction shall control the alamo the state originally turned the alamo over to miss dezavala to-night governor campbell ordered w c day state super intendent of public buildings to take back the alamo at a recent meeting of the daughters of the republic a resolution was adopted turn ing the building over to the executive com mittee of the daughters of the republic miss dezavala refused to turn it over the transfer of the property was to have been made last night miss dezavala took possession yesterday afternoon she locked the doors in the face of the sheriff who tried to serve the injunction he broke down the doors but miss dezavala took refuge on the second floor in the room in which bowie was killed and she has remained there since the sheriff hns refused to permit food to be carried to her miss dezavala's grandfather was vice president dezavala of the texas repub lic one of the men who fought valiantly to defend the alamo against the mexi can london to run special street cars for women will try experiment to save them in rush hours london feb 11 the county council proposes the experiment of running a cer tain number of tram cars for women only during the rush hours in the morning the fierce struggle arlong the passengers at the suburban termini has long been a scandal women and girls have to wrestle with men and boys to secure places in the ears on their way to work they often sustain injuries and have their clothing torn 3 killed 18 injured in western train wreck many plunged through broken trestle work portland ore feb 11 a train fe.'l through a trestle near bete to-night three people were killed in the wreck and eign teen injured many of the injured are in serious condition and it is exacted that tlie number of deaths will be swelled the train was running at a i;.li rate of pej.mi when ii plunged through the bridge episcopal church may soon unite with rome says archbishop ryan prelate sees tendency in america to follow anglican movement for corporate union philadelphia pa feb ar ljis_op ryan thinks there may be a cor porate union of anglicans and episcopal ians with the roman catholic church in the near future the archbishop said to day it is a continuation of a movement that lias been going on for some time in eng land aiming ut reunion with rome the movement existed here before the adoption of the open pulpit canon but the pas sage ot that canon seems to be hasten ing it the present movement among episco palians in this country is the oue lord halifax and a great party iu engltiud belong to looking toward reunion with rome there can be no question that there is such a movement in the episcopal inn church i think a great many epis copalians will come into the catholic church individually and there may be a corporate union asked as to the terms on which the anglicans or episcopalians might enter the catholic church in a body the arch bishop said tbey would be arranged bv agreement with the pope prison for mme goold monaco feb 11.â€”the sentence of death lately passed on mme vere st leger goold for the mnrder of emma levin has been commuted to penal s-rvitude for life plan ravenswood bank prosecution 300 depositors to sue for losses arid talk of cells for operators protesting against the management of the affairs of the itavenswood exchange bank now in the hands of a receiver 300 indignant depositors met last evening in bennett hall and planned legal action to compel the individual promoters of the wrecked institution to make good their losses criminal action against rhc men respons ible for the failure of the bank was dis cussed and an investigation along these lines was promised by assistant state's attorney charles l mckinley himself a loser these men operating this bank under the state laws as a corporation would be guilty of the same offense for which john b walsh was convicted mr mckinley said the law provides no stockholders or officials of a bauk are allowed to bor row more than 10 per ceut of the total cash capital of a bank here we find officers borrowing mo per ceut and whether or not our hands are tied i am unable to say at this time however i will investigate the condition of a flairs myself under the law ami ir there is any way in which we can send them to the penitentiary you may be as sured 1 will do my duly denounce abbot and scoville tries of that where they belong yes go after abbot and scoville thev are the men who broke the bank antl phrases in stronger language greeted the state's attorney's remarks one depositor sergeant ki'ed de i.'eile followed mr mckjnley the men win ran llie ravenswood bank belong iu the penitentiary said he two days before they rto_t : tic oors scoville took 16 nf tt:y money and at the same time told ine their vaults were overflowing he said they did not know what to do with all the money tbey had iu the bank is this the conduct of an honest man the bank officials have fooled us long enough we want our money or we want tno.e fellows behind the bars where they belong go after them now we got noth ing from them so we lose anyway and make an example of ihem if we arc tu lose our bard-earned money approve plans to sue unanimous approval of a plan lo com mo!|ce suits against the individual opera tors of the bank was given following thc rcadiug of the report of a committee ap pointed by the depositors lo investigate the real cotidition of the bank our suits bave already been started by hilda samuelson ella blik a k harper and the hamilton national bank who were depositors al the time the petition was filed last november asking that a te eetver be appointed the uavenswood hank was i partner ship and we found on investigation thai including the present partners there were i wenty nine different persoi.i who bad at eats up his show pig hen duck,goose hungry husband devours trained animals while wife is away getting contracts / new york feb 11 the hallerhan theatrical company of england has gone to smash in new york because the hungry husband of tie lady proprietor ate up all the actors after having delighted the crowned heads or europe the hallerban theatrical com pany came over here seven weeks ago for an extended american tour the haller han theatrical company consisted of mrs grace hallerhan sole owner and manager percival hallerhan husband and property man the beautiful performing pig flo flo two trained hens two educated roosters a trick duck and an acrobatic goose the company put up in the basement of a theatrical boarding house on west twenty-eighth street between ninth and tenth avenues ah the performers slept together and ate together when there was anything to eat mrs hallerhan groan vg under the weight of international press notices went out to get a contract for the act she was gone three weeks bui sadly enough none of the broad way managers would make a contract with i he hallerhan theatrical company mrs hallerhan explained the wonderful stunts of her actors in tain the goose couid t loop the loop with a lighted pipe in its talons the hens skipped ropes the roosters did a prize fight with the goves flo flo imitated :> policeman perfectly the act was truly marvelous but none of the managers could use it well said mrs hallerhan i shall go wi'sr to seek engagements and she did taking all the company's money with her iiiim loiivin percival behind in the base ment to care for the performers while she was gone j'ercival got hungrier and hungrier he hadn't a ceut he saw his actors starving about him flo flo the star of all the company was rapidly dwindling to the mere shadow of a piece of pork when one day two weeks ago the gnawing at perciral'a stomach overcame his 1'ive for his art and he strangled flo flo and ate her at a sitting three days later the trick hen gave up bei profession forever the goose and the roosters fol lowed as the days sped by i'erclval re served i'ne duck for the lasr 1 always had an affection for that thes pian he lamented as he finally wrung he nock ifs a shame but it uausi yiiis morning mrs halicrnan got sac bad been successful she bad n seven contracts in the wosi she burst ini the headquarters with a face of iovous smile the halierhan theatrical company is oil it 5 feet azslzv sue crieu mvrciv.il i s i he actors i'orcival ruiibed a cpmpla'c-ejn mad in there he answered i , id to ao ir grade it was me or ike bow gr.ieie - . so 1 et the show n hi out west i i he west side ponce courl j-night mr uiilli'iban recovered rrom ml i ohicli the fate of , iir perf.ru thrown her nnd tried to get ru order to her uuebaua s arrest k ' j â€¢ j not guilty verdict in m'donald trial by walter linn woman accused of murder whistles nonchalantly while awaiting jury's decision comforts weeping nurse i expected it all along she said i felt sure god was with me shakes jurors hands courtroom bubbles with laughter when tension of nerves relaxes : , a\x rs dora m'donald was ne /â–¼\ quitted a little before 6:30 â– " o'clock last evening of the charge of murdering w_bstev ?. guerin the young man whom she had loved for years it had been a long strainâ€”twenty-two days of trial capped by five hours of wrangling in the jury room those five hours of mystery had the lawyers and relatives of mrs mc donald on edge but she sat whistling in the custodian's room unlif she was led in 1.0 hear from a foreman's lips what the future held for her surely that air of awful unconcern would disappear now even if she bad listened unmoved to the abuse of prosecutors and the degrading stories told by witnesses for the state she must feel the strain of this moment all but defendant show great strain every other soul in the courtroom did there is no moment of suspense like it and men who spend their lives in criminal courts cannot get over the feeling of chill dread in th moments that elapse before a verdict can be officially recorded things happen so fast that a sten ographer can scarcely take tiiem down and yet they seem to drag out into eternity judge brentano himself was pale the feldmans brothers of mrs mc donald looked as though they hat just heard their death warrant read to them the nieces o mrs mcdonald mrs ethel martyn and miss blanch vaughn were haggard and so was the defendant's sister mrs richard vaughn j hamilton lewis chief counsel for the defense could not endure to be present at all and his associates pat rick h o'donnell benjamin m shaff ner mr cain and mr norden could not sit still in their chairs first came judge brentano accom panied by judge chetlain the pre siding judge had been summoned by telephone at 6 o'clock the little crowd of reporters and persistent spectators who had hung about all afternoon threw away cigars and cigarettes and fell into attitudes of expectancy and anxiety they pressed forward to get seats near the jury box and leaned forward in their chairs many of them stood up until they were ordered by bailiff bradley to sit bring in the jury said judge bren tano as he dropped into the big leather-up bolstered cbair behind the bench bradley was waiting for the word at the door to the judge's right looking very solemn and syhynx-like the twelve men filed in and took their usual places mrs m'donald appears in absolute calmness at the same time mrs mcdonald came through the corridor from the custodian's room accompanied by ber nurse miss a k beck mitts beck was trembling hilt there was not a tremor in mrs mcdonald _ bands or a movement of the facial muscles to indicate that she felt the least exelts uient mr norden pulled out her armchair for ml pushed k under her again as s it down ever man in tht uni felt n hoke it hi throat n tr if mrs m onila d it tt s te ave o 1 evidence of it gentl men s'd rhe judge turn ,-Â» totr/hrd ih jury bsve vou agreed upon . verdi'i 3 at first there wa iÂ«wc utf us continued on 2d page 6th column continued on sth page 2d column year of service salary recom tended first . 550 650 he-ond 600 675 third 625 700 fourth _ 700 750 fifth 750 soo sixth s2 50 seventh and subsequent 850 75 first grocp kitst 900 825 second 950 975 third and subsequent 1,000 i.i grammar teachers second grodp present salary year of service salary recommended first $ 550 , rf 650 s-cond 600 675 third 875 725 fourth 725 77 filth 775 825 sixth 850 875 seventh and subsequent 875 900 first grodp first 925 50 second 975 1,000 third and subsequent 1,000 1.025 iguth grade teachers second group first and subsequent 900 925 first grocp first 950 975 second 1 000 1 025 third and subsequent 1,023 1,050 â„¢Â«-= a i weather forecast i 1 Chicago and vicinity show y ers wednesday and probably thurs \, j day continued mild temperature vtt fresh easterly shifting to southed j^f winds the help wanted column of the examiner daily contain many good posi tions fcr the unemployed * a position for everybody is impossible at any time but a large percentage of the best workers who call are furnished a good posi tion through the services ofthe examiner employment exchange wm-57 7 â€” window trimmer high grade man must have general mer chandise experience state street preferred good opening for the right man salary 1 to 22 mji-191 â€” ledger clerk must be thoroughly experienced and not over 30 years of age and able to show a clear record 75 to 90 f-1121 â€” stenographer young ladv flrst class experienced capable of getting out large number of short fetters with as much speed possi ble consistent with good form 12 to 15 f-l 14 bookkeeper to take charge ot small office references as to character und ability must be al ; stenographic experience desired salary 15 call in person 70 washington st trmm m i i %^^>Â»^ w m^,^^rf*-'''''''''**i-g b g'-'i^''^^^^f 6 opportunity k watch for ihe keal estate adver li tisements in the classified section of fe the sunday examiner the best prop t erty to be had tn Chicago will be found jam in the examiner want ad pages nl